Shadow War in Yemen Could Heat Up After 'Printer Bomb' Scare

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Shadow War in Yemen Could Heat Up After 'Printer Bomb' Scare

The intercontinental mail-bomb plot this weekend didn't result in any fatalities. But if its real purpose was to draw the United States deeper into Yemen, where the plot was hatched, then it might be a different kind of success. An intense and more lethal CIA role in Yemen, without cooperation from the weak Yemeni government, might be imminent, indicating that another undeclared war is about to intensify.

White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan didn't say it on the Sunday chat shows, but there's a plan gaining momentum within the Obama administration to expand the CIA's "operational control" over "U.S. hunter-killer teams" from the Joint Special Operations Command tracking al-Qaeda's Yemen-based affiliate. The Wall Street Journal reports that the proposal would let the U.S. "unilaterally" attack al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula – the presumed (but not directly accused) culprits of the plot – while the Yemeni government retained "deniability" for counterterrorism raids. Most likely, that means official public denunciation of commando assaults and drone strikes from President Ali Abdullah Saleh while he privately winks at the operations and takes U.S. cash.

And if that sounds like Pakistan 2.0, it should. So far, the United States has largely relied on cruise missile strikes in Yemen, not drones. But drone strikes, the CIA's preferred answer to terrorism, would tick up under the new plan. Since the drones require bases from which to fly, it's worth asking whether Saleh will turn some of his air fields over to CIA Predator teams – as the Pakistani government secretly did. Saleh is on the verge of receiving a military aid package worth $1.2 billion from the United States, which may help him decide. Whether by drone or by raid, target number one is likely to be al-Qaeda's Yemen bombmaker, Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri, who may have made the bombs that Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab tried to detonate in his underwear on Christmas. (A close second target is probably extremist preacher and U.S. citizen Anwar al-Awlaki.)

The CIA's drone campaign in Pakistan's tribal areas has hit record levels of intensity this year, with 92 attacks so far in 2010. As the Journal has previously reported, ever since al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula attempted to blow up a passenger aircraft on Christmas Day, there's been congressional support for exporting that model to Yemen. A former Green Beret running for Congress, Tommy Sowers, signaled openness to that plan in a recent Danger Room interview. Why? Because shadow wars offer U.S. policymakers the tantalizing prospect of success without responsibility. But rarely can it be said that they actually work as intended.

Both the Obama administration and the Saleh government fear a public backlash in Yemen to stepped-up strikes and raids. And there's no appetite in war-weary America for putting many boots on the ground in Yemen to harass al-Qaeda. Deploying small commando teams, putting missile-armed drones in the skies and authorizing military units to train Yemeni commandos are a way for the United States to step up its efforts while minimizing both domestic and foreign audiences.

It's usually considered a a miracle option, using just enough force to succeed. Back before 9/11, when there was no political constituency for invading Afghanistan, Bill Clinton imagined teams of "black ninjas" rappelling into Osama bin Laden's compounds to take al-Qaeda down.

But more fundamentally, the Obama administration isn't asking the American public to commit to such an expanded military/intelligence role in Yemen. As Noah Shachtman has long observed about Pakistan, most of the country doesn't realize the U.S. is fighting a hot war across the Afghanistan border, with accordingly low levels of oversight, high levels of just-trust-us assurances from the CIA and the administration that the plan is succeedin,; little debate over the merits of expanding the wa; and controversy over an undeclared war's legality.

With terrorist attacks emerging from Yemen, few dispute the need for some kind of response. But assuming that the United States needs to fight a war there, how sustainable will a shadow war really be? And how deeply will the United States ultimately involve itself in yet another country it barely understands?